WhistlingBadger
Professional Cat Herder
Retired Moderator ⚒️
Tank of the Month 🏆
Fish of the Month 🌟
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2011
- Messages
- 7,015
- Reaction score
- 13,039
- Location
- Where the deer and the antelope play
I've never tried tree-stand hunting. It does seem to take a lot of patience. Around here it's more spot-and-stalk, which seems a lot more fun to me, if not as productive. I shoot a lot of leaves off trees, too. It's great practice! You just have to be sure of what's behind the leaf. Bad things can happen if you don't give some thought to what's going to eventually stop your bullet or arrow.Deer season here goes to mid-January, so if I want to catch my older brother, I have to get him during the week....and even then, sometimes he's out there.
I went hunting once. Squirrel. I got bored and started shooting leaves off the trees. Guaranteed way to make sure I don't get anything LOL. I just can't sit there with a gun in my hand and not shoot something. I can fish all day and not catch a thing, but I don't have the patience for hunting.
My brother has gotten my oldest son into hunting. He took him out year before last and my son shot 2 deer in 1 weekend LOL. Of course, my brother was going on and on about how he "gave" them to my son LOL. What - ev - uh.
I'm interested in your bows- you use straight up old-timey bows just made of wood? Do you hunt well with them?
I shoot wooden bows, except a fiberglass-backed recurve that I use for fishing. (I'm not above hunting with a rifle, either.) I started making my own bows during the pandemic lock-down. I'm not very good at it yet, but it's a lot of fun, and hunting with primitive gear keeps me humble. I have several bows in the pipeline right now, including a couple of sinew-backed, juniper heartwood bows that are going to be really beautiful if they don't break. So hopefully I'll have some pictures to share at some point.